In Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah’s debut novel, Chain-Gang All-Stars, incarcerated people fight to the death for a chance at freedom in televised gladiator matches. These “hard action-sports” have become a wildly popular — and extremely profitable — form of entertainment in a not-so-distant, technologically advanced future.
The story is a searing indictment not only of the American prison system, but of the general public’s complicity in exploitation and injustice. And given that the Bay Area is a hub for abolitionist activism — and the place where many real-life dystopian technologies are developed — Chain-Gang All-Stars makes a fascinating subject for the Feb. 4 launch of a new speaker series called Oakland Arts & Lectures.
While the premise of Chain-Gang All-Stars may sound bleak, the 2023 bestseller has a rich emotional core. At its center, two Black women in love reach for connection despite their dehumanizing circumstances. It’s those seeds of hope that remind the reader that though our political landscape might feel like a flaming dumpster careening towards an abyss, there’s still good in humanity, and the potential to fight for a better world.
“My work is to try to remind us that we are it,” says Adjei-Brenyah from his book-filled New York office over Zoom. “Even if we’re not the rule makers, we’re the rule carry-out-ers. We’re not only the victims, we are also the hand that’s holding the hammer. It can be scary, but it’s also powerful as well.”
“We are the power to change things,” the 33-year-old author adds.
At Oakland Arts & Lectures, Adjei-Brenyah will take the stage at Oakstop’s Gaines Gallery in a conversation with Isis Asare, founder of Sistah Scifi, an online bookstore and community centered on Black and Indigenous speculative fiction.
Sistah Scifi is helming the programming at Oakland Arts & Lectures. Inspired by City Arts & Lectures across the bridge in San Francisco, the City of Oakland-funded program’s aim is to connect the Town’s literary community to the national scene. That dovetails with Sistah Scifi’s mission of using speculative fiction to fuel activists’ imaginations.